Suffolk Republican Chairman John Jay LaValle said Wednesday on CNN that he's seen
American flags burned at Hillary Clinton rallies, though when pressed by the host he couldn't name any instances.
Not exact matches
It's offensive to
burn the
American flag or to do a million other things.
As a patriotic
American who trained US Army and just happen to have friends who are both Christian and Moslem... I am ticked off when I see my country's
flag being
burned in the filthy street.
Well Muneef... maybe every time we see a bunch of muslims
burning an
american flag or a bible we should just drop an H - Bomb on them as retaliation.
Any
American who doesn't admit that when they see their
flag burned they want to go out and blow up other
Americans and kill other
Americans and drag their bodies through the streets and
burn down the cities is a liar.
and maybe afghans and iraqis would not
burn american flags... if
americans would not insult them by invading their countries and making war.
They
burn the
American flag all the time in other countries, so what..
Had you been born in Iran, you would be one of those bearded half - wits that
burns American flags.
The new underground doesn't
burn the
American flag like the protestors of old; showing it honor is countercultural enough.
Shall we just
burn the
American flag that managed to survive through the fire and eventual collapse of the towers too?
Mr. Bergen fails to recognize that to some
burning the
American flag is an attempt to provoke but ruled to be free speech by our courts.
The lawsuit alleges that Kanye and Kim
burned an
American flag, shot AK - 47's into the air and then performed a concert for all their al - Qaeda friends.
For example, people who hate America
burn American flags or effigies of people since they can't attack the real place or person.
It is a shame that a person can
burn an
American flag and a Muslim can get away with assault.
They are
burning American flags in Afghanistan.
Furthermore, it is ok for
Americans to
burn the
American flag whether they be Christian, Muslim, Jewish, atheist, members of the local iron workers union, a teacher, a hedge fund manager or shoe shine boy.
I haven't seen any
American Muslims in America
burning flags.
Why is it ok for the Muslims to
burn the
American Flag, but not ok for
Americans to
burn the Muslims Quran?
American flags are
burning across Pakistan with chants in the street of «Death to America.»
If waving the
American flag becomes a gesture only of those happy with the current situation, for example, then
burning the
flag remains a countergesture by those unhappy with the situation.
Or perhaps it the «other» churches that are a problem —
flag waving
American mega churches or «Pipe Organ playing incence
burning» churches that are closed minded?
Certainly if you're coming from the States — from Petersburg, Kentucky, say, or Dayton, Tennessee, or any other of the thousand places where you would be safer lighting a Marlboro off a
burning American flag than being caught with a copy of On the Origin of Species — you're going to find it quite a hike.
He also has a great speech about how someone had to create an
American flag just to
burn it in protest.
Texas v. Johnson is the case that invalidated prohibitions on desecrating the
American flag on the grounds that
burning a
flag in public is protected by the Free Speech Clause of the First Amendment.
Here McCallum excerpts from protests abroad that culminated in the
burning of the
American flag, so that one sees little more than the flames.
In Degraded Material, above, Adams superimposes a
burnt cutout of an empty house on a tired and sagging
american flag.
... the
American Dream is a fist full of shining stars crushed... the
burning corpse of government wrapped in dirty
flags and battle banners lost somewhere upon a bloody beach strewn with the wrecks and martyrs of history...
Meanwhile, the AP reports that Iranian members of Parliament chanted «Death to America» while
burning an
American flag.
Yet, if it is primarily the preserve of constitutional theorists — think of the
American debate about the constitutionality of a proposed
flag -
burning amendment — it is nevertheless an issue with practical implications, as witnessed in the recent Pringle case before the CJEU.
At «Crime & Federalism,» Norm Pattis celebrates retaining the right to
burn the
American flag as a form of protest, even though he doesn't foresee ever feeling the urge to do so.
In another, aimed at neurotics, the diplomat was invisible — replaced by storm clouds, foreigners
burning American flags, and an admonition to «vote like your life depends on it,» intoned by an disembodied narrator.